TODOS Podcast

TODOS Mathematics for ALL

The TODOS: Mathematics for ALL Podcast amplifies the mission of TODOS through conversations exploring the intersection of mathematics education, social justice, and identity. Season 5 brings together in new host Shakiyya Bland to join Theodore Chao and Shari Kaku as they explore the TODOS publication, Antiracist Mathematics Education: Stories of Acknowledgement, Action, and Accountability. Each episode features conversations with select book's chapter authors, diving into the ideas, stories, and classroom realities behind the work. The season is organized around the book's four sections: Students, Administrators, Teachers, and Parents/Caregivers & Community Members, and serves as an audio companion for the TODOS Book Club, running from September 2025 through June 2026. Join us in these conversations, these personal narratives, grounded in the real experiences of people doing this work. Whether you're reading along with the Book Club or simply curious about what it looks like to teach mathematics with equity and justice at the center. Whether you're an educator, advocate, or simply curious about how math intersects with identity and justice, the TODOS Podcast invites you to join these conversations and explore the transformative power of mathematics to uncover hidden narratives, foster solidarity, and reimagine equitable education. Thank you to Dr. Maria Zavala, founder and previous host of the TODOS: Mathematics for ALL podcast. And special thanks to Vector Hold for the amazing synthwave music. Join the TODOS Book Club and keep listening to the TODOS podcast! Bonus content, such as transcripts and files for Season 5 can be found here.

  1. S5E5: Cracking the Code with Sylvia Celedón-Pattichis, Carlos LópezLeiva, and Marios Pattichis

    17H AGO

    S5E5: Cracking the Code with Sylvia Celedón-Pattichis, Carlos LópezLeiva, and Marios Pattichis

    What happens when mathematics, computer programming, and bilingual education come together in an afterschool program for Latine elementary students? And what does it look like when those same kids become the teachers? In this episode, Theodore sits down with three co-authors of Chapter 10: Learning More Mathematics by Cracking the Code: Promoting Algebraic Thinking through Computer Programming from Antiracist Mathematics Education, Dr. Carlos LópezLeiva, Dr. Sylvia Celedón-Pattichis, and Dr. Marios Pattichis. Together, they share the story behind AOLME (Advancing Out-of-school Learning in Mathematics and Engineering), a program born out of the belief that students in Title I, bilingual communities deserve access to the same doors that computer science and engineering can open. The conversation traces a 20-year arc, from the early days of CEMELA and the inspiration of La Clase Mágica, to after-school programs where kids used Legos to understand pixels and came up with their own ways of explaining hashtags and coding syntax, in Spanish, in English, and in their own language. One student, a decade ago, looked at a computer and said, "computer, write me a program." He was right on time with predicting how we use AI to code today. What makes this episode special is how personal it gets. Marios learned to code from an English textbook while he was still learning English. Sylvia and Carlos made the push to bring this work from out-of-school spaces into classrooms, so it wouldn't just reach the kids who chose to show up. The students who went through the program came back as co-facilitators, teaching older students, building identity, and in some cases going on to study engineering. And their daughters were part of the story too. Shari, Shakiyya, and Teddy then reflect on what this chapter means for the moment we're in now, a moment when AI is everywhere and the math education community is still figuring out how to respond. Should students be coding? Should we be teaching them to think critically about the systems being built around them? And what does it look like to use mathematics not just to solve problems, but to create something? Shakiyya closes with a question from page 140 of the book: "How often do your students use mathematics to create something?" Plus, the food! Huevos rancheros, red and green chile, chicken mole enchiladas, Greek salad with New Mexico chili, and piñon coffee! This episode is part of the Season 5 TODOS Book Club series, aligned to the Teachers section of Antiracist Mathematics Education. The next Book Club meeting is March 25. Join us! The transcript. Links to Resources: Web App for Image Generator http://ivpcl.unm.edu/ivpclpages/Research/aolme/app/interactive-img-v2.html AOLME/ESTRELLA Curriculum https://aolme.unm.edu/WebsiteModel/template/index.html AIML Project:  https://github.com/pattichis/AIML  https://github.com/pattichis/AI4All-Med

    53 min

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About

The TODOS: Mathematics for ALL Podcast amplifies the mission of TODOS through conversations exploring the intersection of mathematics education, social justice, and identity. Season 5 brings together in new host Shakiyya Bland to join Theodore Chao and Shari Kaku as they explore the TODOS publication, Antiracist Mathematics Education: Stories of Acknowledgement, Action, and Accountability. Each episode features conversations with select book's chapter authors, diving into the ideas, stories, and classroom realities behind the work. The season is organized around the book's four sections: Students, Administrators, Teachers, and Parents/Caregivers & Community Members, and serves as an audio companion for the TODOS Book Club, running from September 2025 through June 2026. Join us in these conversations, these personal narratives, grounded in the real experiences of people doing this work. Whether you're reading along with the Book Club or simply curious about what it looks like to teach mathematics with equity and justice at the center. Whether you're an educator, advocate, or simply curious about how math intersects with identity and justice, the TODOS Podcast invites you to join these conversations and explore the transformative power of mathematics to uncover hidden narratives, foster solidarity, and reimagine equitable education. Thank you to Dr. Maria Zavala, founder and previous host of the TODOS: Mathematics for ALL podcast. And special thanks to Vector Hold for the amazing synthwave music. Join the TODOS Book Club and keep listening to the TODOS podcast! Bonus content, such as transcripts and files for Season 5 can be found here.